Hi. Is there a way to print a sketch to a printer, or at least to PDF or some other format that can be opened by a drawing tool for printing. Note also that I have two overlaid sketches (1 floor plan, 2 power grid). I'd like to print them "together" -- so that the drawings/text from the two sketches are blended.
Thanks!
No you can't print a sketch. You need to create a 3d model then create a drawing from the model to create a printable drawing. I have a couple other solid modeling programs and they are the same, you can print but all you get is an image file just like Fusion's Capture Image option.
Mark
Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
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Actually, the ability to include sketches in drawings was added not long ago. At least, with some limitations.
So, while there isn't to my knowledge a way to print a sketch from a model directly, you can create a drawing, and either print that or PDF it.
If your model has solid bodies in it, then the base drawing view will by default look at them. You'll have to manually include the sketches in the view.
If your model does NOT have solid bodies in it, then the base view will include the sketches.
In terms of limitations -
- NORMAL sketch lines will appear as phantom lines in drawings. No way to change that.
- CONSTRUCTION lines in sketches will not appear in drawings.
- There's no way to alter properties of either sketch - so if for example, you wanted to emulate AutoCAD layers with different colors or linetypes for the plan vs the power grid, you're out of luck.
Having said that, if all you want is the ability to dimension some things and print to scale, there you go.
@ToddHarris7556 wrote:
In terms of limitations -
- NORMAL sketch lines will appear as phantom lines in drawings. No way to change that.
- CONSTRUCTION lines in sketches will not appear in drawings.
- There's no way to alter properties of either sketch - so if for example, you wanted to emulate AutoCAD layers with different colors or linetypes for the plan vs the power grid, you're out of luck.
Having said that, if all you want is the ability to dimension some things and print to scale, there you go.
Also no dimensions from the sketch will show in the drawing so you might as well export a DXF from the sketch and open in AutoCAD or QCad and dimension. Or just not bother with Fusion's sketch and draw and dimension in another program. Really if you're not going to make a model and stay in 2d Fusion not the tool to use until all sketch tools are in the drawing workspace. Going on current progress, I guess another 5 to 10 years before that happens.
Mark
Mark Hughes
Owner, Hughes Tooling
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+1 to everything @HughesTooling offered :
We love a great many things about Fusion, but drawings are a huge weakness.
While it's possible to get a print of a sketch, personally I wouldn't even think of opening Fusion for this. I'd use Inventor all day long - but I recognize that not everyone can do that.
Hi,
Mark is right that no dimensions appear, but you can dimension sketch elements very well.
If no standard drawing is required, this method can be used.
günther
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